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User: complacence

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Comments · 66

  1. Re:I'm a Redhat/CentOS/Fedora user on Shuttleworth Answers Ubuntu Linux's Critics · · Score: 1

    Yeah, how people could think otherwise is beyond me.

  2. Re:Proper link on Shuttleworth Answers Ubuntu Linux's Critics · · Score: 1

    then what good is it?

    It's obviously still the best product in the world. Usually that's good enough for me.

  3. Re:Spurious survey results? on Geocentrists Convene To Discuss How Galileo Was Wrong · · Score: 1

    Yes Prime Minister clip very much related.

  4. Re:Troll story? on Microsoft Complaints Help Russian Gov't Pursue Political Opposition Groups · · Score: 1

    Occam's Razor: "Entities should not be multiplied beyond necessity."

    Hanlon's Razor: "Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity.

    Karl Menger's Law Against Miserliness (anti-razor): "Entities must not be reduced to the point of inadequacy."
    A simpler but less correct theory should not be preferred over a more complex but more correct one.

    Hanlon's Bane: "To make full use of people who have submitted to Hanlon's Razor, never admit to malice which can be explained as stupidity."

  5. Re:LOLWUT? on Newspapers Cut Wikileaks Out of Shield Law · · Score: 1

    But it should mean not choosing a gun as first resort.

  6. Re:If it violates an amendment on Full-Body Scanners Deployed In Street-Roving Vans · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Are you saying that because it's possible that someone's flawless record of integrity could be corrupted, we should just keep on voting for the already corrupt?

  7. Re:"Her" own course? on "Choose Your Own Adventure" On Your iPhone · · Score: 1

    And all this assuming is why using either "he" or "she" is a bad idea. Singular they or neutral pronouns are the only available unambiguous options.

  8. Cheap on Six Reasons Why Flash Isn't Going Away · · Score: 1

    one falsehood in your post is enough to make the entire thing hogwash

    Though I see this tried often, it just isn't true. Regardless of the merit of the specific post in question, you can't invalidate a post of any scope by invalidating a marginal point.

  9. Re:HOW much of a golden parachute? on HP Board Sued Over Hurd Departure · · Score: 1

    Easy workaround: Give them non-tradable stock?

  10. Re:boards and ceos scratch each other's back on HP Board Sued Over Hurd Departure · · Score: 1

    That's why it's good that people from "outside" (well, a shareholding company) sued. If only it wasn't such an idiotic case. I'm not saying Hurd was doing everything right, but there are far more people out there who did really, really bad things, and no one sued then.

    Why doesn't this whole suing people who fucked over the shareholders, fucked over the company itself, fucked over customers, government, environment, basically fucked over everyone except their close circle of "friends", and then the company and shareholders again via severance package-- why doesn't it happen much more often, as in every single time it's clear they did something against the law and morality, and still walk away with remuneration and the next executive job already in their pocket?

  11. Re:Phone home? on Canonical Begins Tracking Ubuntu Installations · · Score: 1

    I would consider it a courtesy if Canonical actually asked me.

    I beg your pardon? Software that phones home without telling you, even if it's free, has been the source of all kinds of deserved geek rage over the decades. How is this suddenly different?

  12. Impossible everywhere but in PRspeak on Building the Zero-Fatality Car · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The zero-fatality car is stationary and has no passenger or pilot space.

  13. Re:You are NOT fscking serious, right? on Verizon Changing Users Router Passwords · · Score: 1

    Oh, not only most Americans do that.

    I agree about and welcome the impasse. The discussion happened elsewhere in the meantime. Another time, MacLeod!

  14. Re:You are NOT fscking serious, right? on Verizon Changing Users Router Passwords · · Score: 1

    I appreciate exactitude. I was sloppy and own up to it. Please let's get back to things less related to a language I don't speak natively and more related to the content we ought to be discussing.

  15. Re:You are NOT fscking serious, right? on Verizon Changing Users Router Passwords · · Score: 1

    Why don't you take the conditional to be a form of emphasis as I intended it ("even if he was stupid and careless" in the sense of "it doesn't matter that he was stupid and careless")?

    If you did that, maybe you'd realize this isn't "much ado about nothing" as whether he changed his password is totally irrelevant to those questions and besides the point.

  16. Re:uhhh on Verizon Changing Users Router Passwords · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What are you all on about? He said he disabled administrative access from outside. No matter the password, there's intrusion going on here, so there is something to talk about.

    If a password was all there is to protect your router from outside, all hell would break loose for simple brute forcing. You also can't expect Aunt Irma to change her password first thing when she gets net access.

    Finally, even disregarding all that, even if he was stupid and careless, they can't just access the router if he didn't explicitly give them the right in a contract somewhere. I get you're all supercomputerexperts, but maybe we could talk about what he's asking?

    Why is there an open forced access port/back door?
    Is that ok without telling the owner?
    What security is in place that entities besides Verizon can't access it?

  17. Re:doesn't seem that scandalous on First GNOME Census Results · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    You know, this isn't D&D. You can't just say you make an excellent point, you have to actually make one.

    Oh, wait. Were you just being redundant?

    In any case: "Useless reply."

  18. Re:doesn't seem that scandalous on First GNOME Census Results · · Score: 1

    Commercially Canonical is proving that "Linux on the Desktop" is a failure.

    It can't prove any such thing, as it isn't trying to be, yet. All it proves is that if you put enough marketing behind Linux and give your product away for free (to increase its adoption instead of your account balance), adoption does increase and your account balance doesn't.

  19. Re:Source? on Microsoft Has No Plans To Patch New Flaw · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I think it's censored, though. Sorry.

  20. Re:Source? on Microsoft Has No Plans To Patch New Flaw · · Score: 5, Funny

    Here's a picture of a pony:
    http://babybird.files.wordpress.com/2009/08/pony.jpg

    What are you trying to do here? There still is no outright refusal to fix this.

    Instead it says:

    We will continue to investigate the vulnerability and, upon completion of that investigation, we will take appropriate action to protect our customers.

  21. Re:Source? on Damn Vulnerable Linux — Most Vulnerable Linux Ever · · Score: 1

    I blithely expect them to fill in themselves the implied "a number of above zero and up to but probably below 100% of".

  22. Re:Source? on Damn Vulnerable Linux — Most Vulnerable Linux Ever · · Score: 1

    Basic knowledge for whom?

    Slashdot readers, for example.

    Insecure by design: Damn Vulnerable Linux

    Damn Vulnerable Linux is "The most vulnerable and exploitable operating system ever" according to its Web site. It's designed for security training; it includes training material and exercises (as well as a whole bunch of flaws to exploit). As Mayank Sharma notes: "Damn Vulnerable Linux (DVL) is everything a good Linux distribution isn't. Its developers have spent hours stuffing it with broken, ill-configured, outdated, and exploitable software that makes it vulnerable to attacks."

    (Unusual, Obscure, and Useful Linux Distros, 2010-07-01)

  23. Humor fail on Wine 1.2 Released · · Score: 1

    BRB finding a stone to crawl under. Please disregard the parenthesis.

  24. Re:I used to use wine... on Wine 1.2 Released · · Score: 1

    I missed foobar2000 until I installed mpd, mpc and ncmpcpp. I missed ACDSee until I installed feh and imagemagick. I missed utorrent until I installed rtorrent (it goes up to 'r', that's two better).

    A few keybindings and custom scripts using libnotify-bin and zenity later, I am much more happy with this setup.

  25. Neutrality except where it's inconvenient on Chile First To Approve Net Neutrality Law · · Score: 1

    "May not limit the right of a user to enter or use any class of instruments, devices or appliances on the network, provided they [...] do not [...] harm [...] service quality."

    That isn't a catch, it totally invalidates the entire thing. That is precisely the justification being used. Viz: "We can't allow you to use BitTorrent or other high data volume services because they harm service quality for other users."

    This isn't a net neutrality law but a net neutrality except for services that don't deserve neutrality law.